Threads That Bind review

5/5 stars
Recommended if you like:
 fantasy, magic, mythology, threads of fate, mystery

Big thanks to Netgalley, Penguin, and the author for an ARC in exchange for an honest review!

I really liked the magic in this book. The premise is that some people are descended from gods, but only the gods who come in sibling sets. There are a bunch of different city-states in the book, each with their own culture, but the one Io lives in is a Greek-esque city-state called Alante. For Alantians, their “other-born” pairs are things like the Fates, the Muses, descendants of Hypnos, and the Phobos-Deimos twin pair, etc. We do get to see some people who are from outside the city and thus are descended from a different set of gods, but for the most part the focus is Greek. I liked the way each person in a sibling set had a power associated with one of the gods, and that each of the different god powers worked in different ways.

I also liked the worldbuilding in the book. It’s a dystopian fantasy, so the world we’re exposed to is post-collapse, and it’s implied that the world was similar to (if not the same as) our own. Then the collapse happened in a mix of environmental and magical events that resulted in the world we see in the book. I liked the bits of history that are brought into the book, like the Iceberg Wars, and the little things that make the world seem more real, like the roof bridges and flood screens for storefronts.

Io is the moirae-born who can cut people’s threads of fate, but she tends to use her ability to see the Quilt (i.e., the threads connecting everyone) to be a PI. She’s a little rough around the edges, but it’s clear she does care about people, and over the course of the book her drive to fight for the people no one else will becomes stronger. At the same time, she’s pretty wary of opening up to other people as a result of her eldest sister, Thais’, treatment of her when they were younger, before Thais walked out on Io and their other sister, Ava. Part of Io’s arc over the course of the book is reconciling everything that happened with Thais and growing into someone who’s at least a bit more open to others.

It was surprisingly easy to like Edei. Based on the synopsis and the very first scene we see him in, I wasn’t sure how I’d feel about him, but he’s actually a pretty good guy. Edei is someone who is easy to get along with and who has a relatively gentle demeanor about him. Despite the fact that he’s the second of the Fortuna gang, the gang that runs the Silts, he’s not that rough around the edges, probably the result of the fact that he had a very different upbringing.

I liked the side characters in the story and enjoyed how they opened up different sides of the characters. For all her wariness of opening up to other people, Io actually makes friends pretty easily, and it was nice to see her joking around with Nico and Chimdi from the Fortuna gang just as easily as she joked around with Ava and Rosa, her best friend. I hope we get to see more of Rosa, Nico, and Chimdi in the next book, and am curious to see where things go with Ava. Bianca Rossi, the Mob Queen, is definitely someone to be reckoned with and I had a hard time getting a feel for her. There were times when I liked her and times when I didn’t, so I’m looking forward to getting a better of understanding of her in the sequel.

I did guess what the motive was pretty much from the get-go, but it was definitely a weird kind of predictability because even though I knew the why, I couldn’t settle on the who, lol. There were actually a number of pretty viable suspects presented throughout the book, which I think helped obfuscate things in a way that still kept the story going without requiring weird twists. One thing I will say is that Io jumps to conclusions way too much for someone who’s a professional private detective. Her second suspect was really the only one with any solid evidence pointing toward them, but Io treated all three as equally viable, which I thought was a mistake. The mystery is solved by the end of the book and it worked in a way that I didn’t see coming, which I loved!

I love how this book mixes fantasy, dystopian, and noir, and am dying to see what happens next as Io follows up on the loose threads (haha) from the end of this book.

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